Most Planets In the Universe Are Homeless
StartsWithABang writes: We like to think of our Solar System as typical: a central star with a number of planets — some gas giants and some rocky worlds — in orbit around it. Yes, there's some variety, with binary or trinary star systems and huge variance in the masses of the central star being common ones, but from a planetary point of view, our Solar System is a rarity. Even though there are hundreds of billions of stars in our galaxy for planets to orbit, there are most likely around a quadrillion planets in our galaxy, total, with only a few trillion of them orbiting stars at most. Now that we've finally detected the first of these, we have an excellent idea that this picture is the correct one: most planets in the Universe are homeless. Now, thank your lucky star!"
I always wondered why wandering planets couldn't be used instead of dark matter to explain where all the missing mass is.
This impacts Drake equation and might shed light as to why we have not detected any other sentient life in the universe.
No, it does not impact the Drake equation at all. The drake equation is based on R* and f(p) which are the the "rate of star formation" and the "fraction of those stars that have planets" (from your link on wikipedia). Both of these numbers are not affected by this finding.
Dark matter accounts for something like 90% of the gravitational effects that we see.
I've always suspected that "dark matter" very likely isn't matter at all. I suspect it is simply a gap in our model similar to how relativity filled in gaps for Newtonian mechanics. Dark matter (and dark energy) are basically placeholders for observations that do not match our model. That means one of two things. Either there is something we haven't observed yet OR there is something missing from our model. Both are quite possible but we seem fixated on that former when it could very easily be the later.
I actually do have some background in physics (college minor and worked in some research labs) and I've never have any "real" physicist give me a satisfactory explanation as to why invoking some mysterious matter/energy is a more likely answer than a gap in our models. We understand gravity probably the least of the four forces and we don't have a model that integrates it into our Standard Model. Seems to me that the place to look may very well be in the math rather than in the stars.